Thousands of people are expected to join marches and vigils across Europe on Saturday in a show of solidarity with the crowds of refugees seeking sanctuary from conflict in Syria and elsewhere.
A Facebook page set up for what is being called a European Day of Action for Refugees lists dozens of events.
One such march, dubbed “Solidarity with Refugees,” will lead through central London to Downing Street, home of Prime Minister David Cameron — who said this week that Britain would take in up to 20,000 Syrian refugees over the next five years.
Other events are being staged in countries from Belgium, Austria and Romania to Greece, Finland and France.
“We can’t continue to allow thousands to die trying to reach Europe as they search for safety, hope and the chance to live another day,” the Facebook page states.
“We can’t stay silent anymore as our politicians and the media are stigmatizing these men, women and children as threats and burdens.
“We can’t let our governments close all our borders and build fences to keep people in need out. That’s not what Europe should be about.”
European leaders have been struggling to cope with the massive influx of refugees and migrants pouring across Europe’s borders in recent weeks.
On Wednesday, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker set out proposals for mandatory quotas for EU countries to take in 120,000 refugees who were already in Italy, Greece and Hungary on top of plans made in May to relocate 40,000 from Italy and Greece.
EU member states must still agree to the European Commission’s proposals, which are backed by Germany. Their interior ministers are due to meet Monday in Brussels, Belgium, to discuss the issue.
As many as 10,000 migrants are arriving in Germany per day, according to German Interior Ministry spokesman Tobias Plate.
Officials throughout the country have been asked to assist with registration and accommodation needs, he said Saturday
Hungary denies mistreatment claims
Hungary, a country at the forefront of Europe’s migrant crisis, came under scrutiny Friday after video emerged showing police throwing bags of food into crowds of refugees from behind a barrier at a migrant transit camp.
An activist shot the footage Wednesday at a facility that authorities run in Roszke, on Hungary’s southern border with Serbia.
It’s one of many European countries struggling to cope with the influx — but has been singled out for criticism by rights groups for alleged mistreatment of the migrants.
On Friday, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban provided a different picture of the migrants’ overall conduct, which he described as “a de facto rebellion.”
The Premier praised police for dealing with the massive migration “without the use of force.”
Authorities provided a similar defense of police when asked about the video filmed in Roszke.
However, a Human Rights Watch report released Friday condemned what it described as “abysmal conditions” in two reception centers in Roszke.
“The detainees at Roszke are held in filthy, overcrowded conditions, hungry, and lacking medical care,” said Peter Bouckaert, emergencies director at Human Rights Watch.
Hungary, which lies on a popular transit route from Greece through the Balkans to Northern and Western Europe, has seen tens of thousands of refugees and migrants — many of them fleeing war-torn Syria — cross the border in recent weeks.
Many are simply seeking to pass through en route to countries seen as more welcoming to refugees, such as Germany and Sweden.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel published a podcast Saturday encouraging women migrants — many of them traumatized by their experiences — not to isolate themselves but to learn German and seek contact with others.
“I believe there are many possibilities and initiatives in Germany that look forward to any woman who stretches out her feelers. So, I say: Be brave,” she said.
Mediterranean deaths
At least 175,000 migrants from Syria have reached Greece in 2015, a figure that’s twice the previous estimate, the International Organization for Migration said Friday.
Overall, a record number of 423,761 migrants, including refugees seeking asylum in the European Union, have made the dangerous journey across the Mediterranean so far this year, the IOM said. That number is more than twice the 219,000 figure for all of 2014, the group said.
Most of the arrivals in 2015 were registered in Greece, with 309,356 people. The next top destination was Italy, with 121,139.
A total of 2,748 migrants have died so far in 2015 while trying to cross the Mediterranean, accounting for 73% of all migrant deaths worldwide, the IOM said.
Ahead of Monday’s EU meeting in Brussels, humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders called for EU leaders to put an end to policies — such as closing off borders — that it says are turning a manageable influx of people into a human tragedy.
“Some measures have made the situation worse: fences and forced fingerprinting only push people to choose more clandestine and dangerous routes,” said the group’s international president, Dr. Joanne Liu.
“Lives continue to be lost at sea, in the back of lorries and in makeshift camps where people live in unacceptable conditions in the heart of the European Union. It is time to put an end to these policies of deterrence.”